• โ€œBlessedโ€œ Is the Second RVA Casino Referendum

    by Jon Baliles

    Early voting has begin in Virginia and the Richmond casino advocates have gone all-in with the mayor and City Council to make sure the referendum got back on the ballot and now are betting the house with an absurd amount of money to make sure the referendum passes this time.

    Jimmy Cloutier at Virginia Investigative Journalism has an interesting piece on the all out effort by the casino advocates to buy their way to a victory at the pollsย  this time around. He points out that two out-of-state companies (Urban One, based in Maryland and Churchill Downs, based in Kentucky) have already raised $8.1 million which โ€œdwarfs the amount of money raised in every Virginia legislative race and ballot initiative in state history, according to an analysis of campaign finance data by OpenSecrets.โ€ (more…)


  • Early Voting Starts Today: Bank Your Vote

    And there’s no need to leave the house!

    by Kerry Dougherty

    This may be my autumn of living dangerously.

    Heck, I may roller skate down a flight of stairs. Without a helmet. I may drive on the interstate. Without a seatbelt. Shoot, I may even give gas station sushi a try.

    If I donโ€™t make it till Election Day? Who cares?

    Iโ€™m voting by mail.

    My vote will count, whether Iโ€™m dead or alive!

    Yep, conservatives and libertarians are late to this game, but itโ€™s time we all joined in. Gov. Glenn Youngkin launched SecureYourVoteVirginia.com in July, urging Republicans and Independents to do what Democrats did to great success in the last election:

    Bank those votes.

    That way, unforeseen emergencies – illness, car problems, hurricanes – canโ€™t disrupt your plan to get to the polls.

    Mail-in voting makes a difference. And there are 45 days of it in Virginia this year. Beginning today.

    Consider what happened in the whisker-close Kevin Adams vs. Aaron Rouse special election in January to fill the state senate seat Jen Kiggans vacated when she was elected to Congress.

    Rouse, a Democrat, won. With about a 1% margin or just 696 votes.

    Yet Adams took the in-person vote on Election Day and even the early, in-person voters.

    Adams was slaughtered, however, in the mail-in vote. (more…)


  • In New Mexico, Union Troops Have Been Cancelled

    By Steve Haner

    In Santa Fe, New Mexico, when the wave of historical monuments destruction hit three years ago, it was a memorial to Civil War Union soldiers that was toppled by a mob.

    There were Union soldiers out in what was then a sparsely populated territory? Yes, the Civil War reached that far. Santa Fe was briefly occupied by Confederate troops from Texas in 1862, for about a month. A couple of battles (skirmishes by eastern standards) were fought on its territory, the final one just 25 miles from town at Glorietta Pass. (more…)


  • Charts of the Day: Teacher Vacancies

    by James A. Bacon

    The teacher shortage at Virginia’s public schools is getting worse. School divisions report 4,304 unfilled positions in the 2023-24 school year, according to a recent report by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC). Out of a teacher workforce of about 87,000, the creates an average statewide vacancy rate of 4.8%.

    The shortages are not evenly distributed, however, as seen in the table below.

    (more…)


  • Transparency? Hah!

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Maybe it was the weirdness of amending the biennial budget after Year 2 of the biennium had started.ย  Maybe all the money they had to spend made them dizzy. Maybe they were in a hurry because many of them were in the middle of re-election campaigns. Whatever the reason, the General Assembly decided in its special session to adopt the budget to sacrifice transparency in favor of efficiency.

    A quick review of the normal procedure will serve to clarify how different this year was. Normally, after both houses have considered the budget bill and rejected each otherโ€™s version, the bill is sent to a conference committee comprised of members from both houses. In a largely shrouded process, the conference committee eventually produces a report consisting of all the changes to the introduced budget bill that its members have agreed upon. (Comparisons to the Vatican College of Cardinals electing a new Pope are apt.) (more…)


  • Woke Bloat at Virginia Universities


    by James A. Bacon

    Step aside California! Public universities in Virginia have built larger diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) bureaucracies than taxpayer-funded universities in any other state, concludes a new backgrounder by The Heritage Foundation. The DEI bureaucracy at the University of Virginia includes 94 employees listed on its website, says the report. Virginia Tech has 83 DEI personnel, while George Mason University has 69.

    Expressed as a ratio of DEI bureaucrats to tenure-track faculty members, GMU earned the top spot as DEI top-heavy, with a ratio 0f 7.4 to 100. UVa was close behind with 6.5, while Tech was 5.6. In comparison, uber-woke Cal Berkeley has a 6.1 per 100 ratio.

    (I’ll have to stop making quips about UVa being the Berkeley of the East Coast. From now on I’ll describe Berkeley as the UVa of the West Coast.) (more…)


  • Navy Ditches Drag Queen Recruiting Videos

    Norfolk naval base

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Whoa. Stop the presses. Big news out of Washington.

    Navy brass has confirmed that itโ€™s scrapped its ingenuous recruiting tool. You know, the one we wrote about last spring: drag queens.

    Yep, Yeoman 2nd Class Joshua Kelley, a non-binary sailor who likes to dress up like a woman and prance around on stage as drag queen Harpy Daniels, will no longer be featured in Navy recruiting videos.

    We wrote about this sailor last May.

    This is a stunning about-face. Who could have predicted that fishnet stockings and lipstick wouldnโ€™t be an irresistible lure to bring in the sort of sailors we need in the modern American Navy? Who knew that drag queens would rather be reading to pre-schoolers than twerking to serve their country? (more…)


  • By the Way, What Is Virginia Tech’s View on Parental Rights?

    Catherine Cotrupi

    Virginia Tech’s interim dean of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion has been accused of violating Tech’s email policy by forwarding a message that slammed local conservative school board candidates as โ€œhateful,โ€ according to The Daily Signal. In responding to an email sent to her Tech account blasting the local candidates for their “anti-trans” and “anti-woke” outlook, Catherine Cotrupi forwarded the email with the notation, โ€œSharing in case youโ€™re interested.” One of the school board candidates is contemplating a lawsuit.

    Undoubtedly, Cotrupi deserves a hand slapping, but it’s not as if she originated the email chain. One can interpret her action as careless, not a commandeering of state resources to advance a political agenda. Of far greater concern is her implicit endorsement of the representations in the email, which is indicative of a mindset that informs her DEI work at Tech.

    The local school board candidates, it appears from the Daily Signal article, are guilty of the cardinal sin of supporting Governor Glenn Youngkin’s โ€œModel Policies on Ensuring Privacy, Dignity, and Respect for All Students,โ€ upholding parental rights in transgender issues at public K-12 schools. One wonders if Cotrupi believes Virginia Tech parents have any right to be informed of, or involved in, life-altering decisions — hormone therapy, surgery, etc. — made by their children with the university’s knowledge and consent. (more…)


  • Giant Utility Rejects Net Zero Power; Big Fight Follows

    by David Wojick

    Dominion Energy, Virginiaโ€™s big electric utility, is telling the state it does not foresee complying with the 2045 net zero power target in the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA). The preferred option in Dominionโ€™s latest Integrated Resources Plan (IRP) retires no fossil-fueled power generators, other than the few old ones that are already in the process of retirement. In fact, it adds a lot more fossil juice.

    Up front in the IRP, Dominion puts it this way: โ€œDue to an increasing load forecast, and the need for dispatchable generation, the Alternative Plans show additional natural-gas-fired resources and preserve existing carbon-emitting units beyond statutory retirement deadlines established in the VCEA. The law explicitly authorizes the Company to petition the SCC for relief from these requirements on the basis that the unit retirements would threaten the reliability or security of electric service to customers.โ€

    So, in effect, this is a notice to Virginiaโ€™s utility regulator, the State Corporation Commission (SCC), that Dominion is prepared to petition for permission to not comply with the net zero power generation mandate in the VCEA. (more…)


  • Fear and Loathing in Harrisonburg

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    Fifteen months ago, I wrote the following about last yearโ€™s Harrisonburg City Council elections:

    We need people, independent or party, who value pragmatism over ideology. And we need people who know the difference between pragmatism and cynicism, and the difference between opportunity and opportunism. This would be the year for people who are concerned, in the words of an ancient Greek poet, about what is right and good for their city, and are willing to sacrifice the time, treasure, and energy to work for those concerns.

    The Harrisonburg Democratic Committee reacted by kicking me off a database Iโ€™d been using to help candidates for 20 years, and continued a nomination process marked by two deeply flawed caucuses. The year ended with a council dominated by ideological opportunists. (The reference to the database is thrown in to highlight absurdity; you get it or you donโ€™t.)

    Next year three out of five City Council members will be on the ballot. Mayor Reed, elected eight years ago as “Everywoman,” has since grown to become the moral center of the council. The other two are a man with the personal behavior of a person half his age and a woman who, in the immortal words of Jed Bartlett, has turned being un-engaged into a Zen-like thing.

    In that same West Wing scene, Bartlett says, โ€œWe should have a great debate. We owe it to everyone.โ€ Wouldnโ€™t it be pretty to think so?

    There is a class of people in the city, from the serious to the absurdist, who have managed to keep up with or remain engaged in local politics even with the diminution of local journalism. Many would probably like to see that great debate about the cityโ€™s future. Right now theyโ€™re asking questions like โ€œWhat are the Democrats going to do?โ€ and โ€œWill the Republicans run anybody?โ€ (more…)


  • Alumni Groups File Amicus Brief in Virginia Tech Free Speech Case

    by James A. Bacon

    The Alumni Free Speech Alliance (AFSA) and alumni groups from nine colleges and universities, including The Jefferson Council, submitted anย  amicus curiae brief to the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday urging the court to hear a case brought by Speech First over the issue of bias reporting practices and procedures at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

    โ€œThe use of bias reporting systems has become pervasive across American college and university campuses and these systems create a climate of fear and intimidation that causes many students to self-censor and discourages constitutionally protected speech,” said AFSA President Charles Davis. “These bias reporting systems have no place at a university whose defining purpose as a place of learning and human fulfillment can only be achieved through a steadfast commitment to free speech.โ€

    From the brief:

    Rather than adopting explicitly punitive speech codes or conditioning participation in university life on acceptance of prevailing views, colleges such as Respondent created โ€œbias responseโ€ systems. (more…)


  • Factoid of the Day: Speeding in Virginia

    Maniacs. Image credit: Washington Post

    Virginia has the third highest rate of fatal crashes in which someone was driving faster than the speed limit or too fast for road conditions, according to personal injury law firm Heninger Garrison Davis in an analysis of National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data.

    Virginia recorded 906 fatal crashes; speed figured as a factor in 240.ย The speeding rate of 26.5% is more than 50% higher than the national average. The press release did not specify the year these figures are based upon, but a web search reveals that the most recent NHTSA crash data comes from 2020.ย 

    I blame out-of-state drivers on Interstate-95. — JAB


  • Thunder in the Pulpits

    by Michael Giere

    โ€œBut this was not always so. In fact, for much of our history, it has been just the opposite. Godly men and women who were fearless, bold, strong, and savvy have been central to the American experience.โ€

    There has never been anything in history like the US Constitution, signed on September 17, 1787. It is the crown jewel of human advancement and bids freedom not for some but for all. It stands alone, enshrining and paying homage to the core reality of manโ€™s existence โ€“ that the dignity and rights of every person and their personal freedom donโ€™t come from the word or works of an impermanent ruler, a mob, or government but from the permanent promise of the Creator.

    The Constitution began with a convention and 55 delegates from the newly-free Colonies called to modify the Articles of Confederation. It became a convention that would reshape history. Influential members such as James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and George Washington, among others, were convicted that the Confederation needed a stronger national government, and the Convention settled on Mr. Madisonโ€™s Virginia Plan as a starting document to replace the Articles of Confederation. (more…)


  • Will Dove Get the Bud Light Treatment?

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Does the name Morgan Bettinger sound familiar?

    Perhaps not.

    Sheโ€™s just another victim of fake hate at the University of Virginia. A girl who was wrongly labeled a racist and who suffered as a result of a relentless, mean-spirited campaign to drive her out of school.

    Meanwhile, the person who accused her of racism, Zyahna Bryant, went from BLM activist to the spokeswoman for the Fat Liberation Movement who just landed a partnership with Dove. (more…)


  • Voyeurism Isnโ€™t Good for the Soul (or Politics)

    Susanna Gibson, Democratic nominee for the 57th District seat in the Virginia House of Delegates.

    by Shaun Kenney

    The scandal of the week involving Susanna Gibson is an indictment of our politics. Shame on us all for participating in it.

    HAMLET Get thee โŸจtoโŸฉ a nunnery. Why wouldst thou be
    a breeder of sinners? I am myself indifferent honest,
    but yet I could accuse me of such things that it
    were better my mother had not borne me: I am
    very proud, revengeful, ambitious, with more offenses
    at my beck than I have thoughts to put them
    in, imagination to give them shape, or time to act
    them in. What should such fellows as I do crawling
    between earth and heaven? We are arrant knaves
    โŸจall;โŸฉ believe none of us. Go thy ways to a nunnery.

    โ€” William Shakespeare, โ€œHamletโ€ Act 3, Scene 1 (1601)

    Ophelia has given herself to Hamlet. Yet having placed her trust totally in men โ€” her father, her brother, her lover โ€” she is told by her beloved to remove herself to a nunnery. Or in the context of the Elizabethan age? A brothel โ€” thus exchanging the ideas of nobility and love for pure utility and momentary pleasure.

    Realizing the world for what it is โ€” or at least, the world of Hamlet, Laertes, and Polonius โ€” drives Ophelia insane. Having relied upon a branch made of willow, she drowns in a shallow pool, able yet unwilling to save herself and face such a world. (more…)